New year, new start for two families on the Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory

The year 2019 will always be a special one
for two families in the Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte community. April
and her kids, Trinity, CJ and Kira, moved into their new home on
December 14, in time to celebrate the holidays and usher in a new year.
During the event, Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte education counsellor and
project supporter Joe Brown began the dedication with a prayer in the
Mohawk language. And on January 10, their new neighbours, Amy and her
children, four-year-old Cameron and eight-year-old Kaylen, took
possession of their new home just in time to celebrate Amy’s 35th
birthday.

“I was thinking about leaving the reserve before Habitat,” Amy said. Meanwhile, April and her three kids, aged 11 to 17, were trying to make the best out of living with her parents. “We were all crammed into a three-bedroom house. We had a makeshift bedroom for my son, so he really didn’t have a bedroom,” April said.

Now everyone in April’s family has their own room in their
1,200-square-foot bungalow. Amy’s family’s home is the same size and
both were built to high energy-efficiency standards which will mean
lower energy bills. Both pay an affordable mortgage geared to their
income to own their homes as part of Habitat’s affordable homeownership
program.

Habitat for Humanity Canada’s Indigenous Housing Partnership

April’s and Amy’s housing challenges are not unusual in many
Indigenous communities. The federal government has pledged $600 million
over three years to support housing in Indigenous communities as part of
a housing strategy being developed with First Nations. Overcrowding,
mould and access to clean drinking water are just some of the major
housing challenges many Indigenous people face day‑to‑day.

That’s why Habitat for Humanity in Canada is partnering with
Indigenous communities to develop healthy housing solutions with
Indigenous families. Habitat Canada’s Indigenous Housing Partnership
helps improve living conditions for Indigenous families, on and off
Traditional Territories, and also offers construction skills training
for Indigenous youth and women.

In 2018, 30 Indigenous families moved into their new Habitat
homes. With the help of local Habitats across the country, 221 families
have achieved homeownership through the Indigenous Housing Partnership,
in both urban areas and on First Nations, Métis Settlements, and
Traditional Territories. By 2020, Habitat Canada’s goal is to partner
with more than 300 Indigenous families and provide 200 Indigenous youth
and women with skills training opportunities annually.

Dedicated volunteers are key

April and her daughter about to cut the ribbon at her home dedication

April and Amy spent the summer of 2018 working alongside other volunteers. Families who apply and are accepted to become Habitat homeowners purchase their home through an interest-free mortgage geared to their income with no down payment and contribute at least 500 volunteer hours to Habitat.

“You can learn everything — electrical, plumbing, everything. It’s
also good to watch every little step along the way,” Amy said. Habitat
homeowners also receive training in areas such as home maintenance and
financial literacy.

Volunteers and community support both from within and outside the
Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte community were essential to the success of
this project. The project in Tyendinaga would not have succeeded without
the support, commitment and hard work of the Mohawks of the Bay of
Quinte, many of whom volunteered on the build site.

“We were committed from day one to using local talent, local
volunteers and local companies wherever possible to build each house,”
said Bob Clute, now retired, who was the executive director of Habitat
for Humanity Prince Edward-Hastings during the project.

Teams of Enbridge employees also volunteered to build the homes on
Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory. In 2013, Enbridge partnered with Habitat
for Humanity, investing $1 million towards the Enbridge Aboriginal Home
Program. “Habitat is about building hope for one family at a time. As
part of the Enbridge Aboriginal Home Program, we share in that mission
to support Indigenous families and build hope,” said Roxanna Benoit,
Vice-President of Public Affairs, Communications and Sustainability at
Enbridge. “These builds are an opportunity to make a real and tangible
difference for this community.”

But as important as how this project successfully came together is,
those details weren’t on eight-year-old Kaylen’s mind the day her mom
took possession of their new home.

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